The open and composable observability and data visualization platform. Visualize metrics, logs, and traces from multiple sources like Prometheus, Loki, Elasticsearch, InfluxDB, Postgres and many more.
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grafana/contribute/development.md

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# Developer guide
This guide helps you get started developing Grafana.
## Dependencies
Make sure you have the following dependencies installed before moving on to set up your developer environment:
- [Git](https://git-scm.com/)
- [Go](https://golang.org/dl/)
- [Node.js (Long Term Support)](https://nodejs.org)
- [Yarn](https://yarnpkg.com)
### macOS
We recommend using [Homebrew](https://brew.sh/) for installing any missing dependencies:
```
brew install git
brew install go
brew install node
npm install -g yarn
```
## Download Grafana
We recommend using Go to download the source code for the Grafana project:
1. Add `export GOPATH=$HOME/go/` to the bottom of your `$HOME/.bash_profile`.
1. Open a terminal and run `go get github.com/grafana/` in your terminal. This command downloads, and installs Grafana to your `$GOPATH`.
1. Open `$GOPATH/src/github.com/grafana/grafana` in your favorite code editor.
## Build Grafana
Grafana consists of two components; the _frontend_, and the _backend_.
### Frontend
Before we can build the frontend assets, we need to install the dependencies:
```
yarn install --pure-lockfile
```
After the command has finished, we can start building our source code:
```
yarn start
```
Once `yarn start` has built the assets it will continue to do so whenever any of the files change. This means you don't have to manually build the assets whenever you've made a change to the code.
Next, we'll build the web server that will serve the frontend assets we just built.
### Backend
Build and run the backend, by running `make run` in the root directory of the repository. This command will compile the Go source code, and start a web server.
By default, you can access the web server at `http://localhost:3000/`.
Log in using the default credentials:
| username | password |
| -------- | -------- |
| `admin` | `admin` |
When you log in for the first time, Grafana will ask you to change your password.
## Test Grafana
The test suite consists of three types of tests: _Frontend tests_, _backend tests_, and _end-to-end tests_.
### Run frontend tests
We use [jest](https://jestjs.io/) for our frontend tests. Run them using yarn:
```
yarn jest
```
### Run backend tests
If you're developing for the backend, run the tests with the standard Go tool:
```
go test -v ./pkg/...
```
### Run end-to-end tests
The end-to-end tests in Grafana uses [puppeteer](https://github.com/GoogleChrome/puppeteer) to run automated scripts in a headless Chrome browser. To run the tests:
```
yarn e2e-tests
```
By default, the end-to-end tests assumes Grafana is available on `localhost:3000`. To use a specific URL, set the `BASE_URL` environment variable:
```
BASE_URL=http://localhost:3333 yarn e2e-tests
```
To follow the tests in the browser while they're running, add the `BROWSER` and `SLOWMO` environment variables:
```
BROWSER=1 SLOWMO=1 yarn e2e-tests
```
## Configure Grafana for development
The default configuration, `grafana.ini`, is located in the `conf` directory.
To override the default configuration, create a `custom.ini` file in the `conf` directory. You only need to add the options you wish to override.
Enable the development mode, by adding the following line in your `custom.ini`:
```
app_mode = development
```
### Add data sources
By now, you should be able to build and test a change you've made to the Grafana source code. In most cases, you need to add at least one data source to verify the change.
To set up data sources for your development environment, go to the [devenv](devenv) directory in the Grafana repository:
```
cd devenv
```
Run the `setup.sh` script to setup a set of data sources and dashboards in your local Grafana. The script creates a set of data sources called **gdev-\<type\>**, and a set of dashboards located in a folder called **gdev dashboards**.
Some of the data sources require databases to run in the background.
Installing and configuring databases can be a tricky business. Grafana uses [Docker](https://docker.com) to make the task of setting up databases a little easier. Make sure you [install Docker](https://docs.docker.com/docker-for-mac/install/) before proceeding to the next step.
In the root directory of your Grafana repository, run the following command:
```
make devenv sources=influxdb,loki
```
The script generates a Docker Compose file with the databases you specify as `sources`, and runs them in the background.
See the repository for all the [available data sources](https://github.com/grafana/grafana/tree/master/devenv/docker/blocks). Note that some data sources have specific Docker images for macOS, e.g. `prometheus_mac`.
## Build a Docker image
To build a Docker image, run:
```
make build-docker-full
```
The resulting image will be tagged as grafana/grafana:dev.
**Note:** If you've already set up a local development environment, and you're running a `linux/amd64` machine, you can speed up building the Docker image:
1. Build the frontend: `go run build.go build-frontend`.
1. Build the Docker image: `make build-docker-dev`.
**Note:** If you are using Docker for macOS, be sure to set the memory limit to be larger than 2 GiB. Otherwise `grunt build` may fail. The memory limit settings are available under **Docker Desktop** -> **Preferences** -> **Advanced**.
## Learn more
- Read our [style guides](/contribute/style-guides).
- Learn how to [Create a pull request](/contribute/pull-request.md).
- Read [How to contribute to Grafana as a junior dev](https://medium.com/@ivanahuckova/how-to-contribute-to-grafana-as-junior-dev-c01fe3064502) by [Ivana Huckova](https://medium.com/@ivanahuckova).